Connecticut CT
No risk-bearing MCOs. State retains full financial risk; contracts with non-risk ASOs for medical, behavioral health, dental, and fiscal-agent functions.
CT Medicaid (HUSKY Health): UNIQUE FFS-DOMINANT MODEL. CT returned to FFS in 2012 after exiting risk-based managed care. Now uses Administrative Service Organization (ASO) model: Community Health Network of CT (CHNCT) for medical, Carelon Behavioral Health for BH (CT Behavioral Health Partnership), DentaQuest for dental, Veyo for transportation. ASOs receive administrative fees; services paid FFS by DSS via interChange. PA goes through CHNCT for medical / Carelon for BH. NOT a WISeR pilot state.
Who administers prior authorization in Connecticut
No MCO brands catalogued yet for this jurisdiction.
Structural facts on file
Connecticut transitioned from MCO-administered Medicaid to a state-run managed-FFS model in 2012. The state cited high MCO administrative overhead and low provider participation as the rationale. Post-transition: admin overhead dropped to 3-4%, primary-care physician participation in the Medicaid network increased substantially.
Connecticut Medicaid is branded "HUSKY Health" and administered directly by the state — managed fee-for-service model since 2012, when CT eliminated private MCOs. State pays providers directly and handles care coordination internally. Distinct from per-MCO PA grids — confirms FFS shape classification.
No risk-bearing MCOs. State retains full financial risk; contracts with non-risk ASOs for medical, behavioral health, dental, and fiscal-agent functions.
Connecticut dissolved risk-based Medicaid MCOs in 2012; HUSKY Health is a self-insured managed-FFS program. Prior authorization is CENTRALIZED through Community Health Network of CT (CHNCT), the statewide MEDICAL ASO. CHNCT publishes its OWN state-specific clinical PA policies as ~90+ per-topic PDFs (per-drug/device/procedure) at huskyhealthct.org/providers/policies_procedures.html, reviewed against the DSS medical-necessity definition. WHAT IS PA-REQUIRED is expressed in two places: (1) ~25 per-provider-type Benefit Grids (code-level PA matrices) at benefits_grids/, and (2) a master PA Requirements list (PA_Requirements_for_Website_Faxes.pdf). Service QRGs supplement. Radiology PA is delegated to eViCore; behavioral health to Carelon (CT BHP, BHP_Grid); pharmacy is state-administered FFS via the CT Medicaid PDL on ctdssmap.com (Gainwell MMIS portal); dental to DentaQuest; NEMT to Veyo. Medical PA submission portal = GuidingCare (cnt.guidingcare.com). Authority chain: DSS (medical-necessity definition + policy owner) -> CHNCT (UM/PA reviewer & policy publisher) -> Gainwell/interChange (claims). CT stands alone: single-ASO centralized criteria publishing, NOT MCO-delegated and NOT a state-manual TAR model like CA.
Connecticut has achieved high performance rankings since the 2012 MCO elimination — notably leads the nation in preventive checkup rates for children and adolescents. Useful structural data point: state-run managed-FFS can outperform commercial MCO administration on specific quality metrics.
## 1. How CT requires PA Connecticut's Medicaid program, known as HUSKY Health, requires prior authorization (PA) for various medical services and procedures to ensure medical necessity and cost-effectiveness. The requirements are detailed in the provider manual and specific clinical policies published by Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT), which serves as the state’s Medical Administrative Services Organization (ASO). Key points include: - **Medical Necessity Documentation**: Providers must submit documentation supporting the medical necessity of services. - **Service-Specific Policies**: Specific PA requirements are outlined in clinical policies and benefit grids for different service categories such as genetic testing, cardiac rehab, dialysis, inpatient hospital admissions, behavioral health services, organ transplants, continuous glucose monitors (CGMs), wheelchairs, home health services, infertility procedures, and more. - **Exclusions**: Certain services or conditions may be excluded from PA requirements. For example, cystic fibrosis testing (CPT codes 81220-81224) and SMA testing (CPT code 81329) under certain diagnosis conditions do not require PA. ## 2. How CT publishes and reports PA Connecticut publishes its prior authorization requirements through various documents and portals: - **Provider Manual**: The provider manual, specifically Chapter 8 on Clinical Services, outlines general guidelines for PA in Connecticut Medicaid. - **Clinical Policies**: CHNCT publishes detailed clinical policies as PDFs covering specific services. These policies are available on the CT Department of Social Services (DSS) website or through the HUSKY Health Provider Guide. - **Benefit Grids**: Benefit grids provide service-specific details, including which services require PA and any exclusions. Examples include the Genetic Testing Grid, Outpatient Hospital Grid, DME Grid, Inpatient Hospital Grid, and BHP Grid. - **Online Portals**: Providers can access these documents through online portals such as CMAP (Connecticut Medicaid Administrative Portal) or the HUSKY Health Provider Guide. ## 3. CT's CMS-0057-F and PA-reform compliance posture Connecticut’s stance on CMS-0057-F, which outlines requirements for prior authorization reform, is reflected in its clinical policies and benefit grids: - **Clinical Policies**: CHNCT publishes detailed clinical policies that align with CMS guidelines. These policies specify the criteria for medical necessity and provide clear instructions for providers. - **Benefit Grids**: Benefit grids are updated regularly to reflect changes in PA requirements as mandated by CMS-0057-F. For example, the Outpatient Hospital Grid includes updates on which services require PA and any exclusions. - **Transparency**: Connecticut ensures transparency by making clinical policies and benefit grids publicly available through its provider manual and online portals. However, there are some gaps in the provided information: - WISeR does not apply to Connecticut. WISeR = CMS "Wasteful and Inappropriate Service Reduction," a Medicare prior-authorization model running in only six states (AZ, NJ, OH, OK, TX, WA); the placeholder finding is not a signal. - Effective dates for several clinical policies are not specified, which can lead to confusion regarding when changes take effect. ## 4. How CT runs its own program Connecticut’s Medicaid program, HUSKY Health, operates as a state-run managed fee-for-service (FFS) model: - **State Administration**: The Connecticut Department of Social Services (DSS) administers the Medicaid program directly. - **Medical ASO**: Community Health Network of Connecticut (CHNCT) serves as the Medical Administrative Services Organization (ASO), handling medical, behavioral health, dental, and fiscal-agent functions. - **No MCOs**: Since 2012, Connecticut has eliminated all private Managed Care Organizations (MCOs). The state handles care coordination internally to reduce administrative overhead and improve provider participation. - **1115 Waivers**: Connecticut operates several 1115 waivers, including the Connecticut Substance Use Disorder Demonstration, Medicaid Coverage for Justice-Involved Population Re-entry (amendment to SUD demo), and Covered Connecticut. ## 5. Patterns, what's notable, and what's missing/uncertain ### Notable Patterns: - **Centralized PA Process**: Prior authorization is centralized through CHNCT, with detailed clinical policies published as PDFs. - **Service-Specific Policies**: Each service category has its own set of guidelines and criteria for PA, ensuring specificity and clarity. - **Regular Updates**: Benefit grids are updated regularly to reflect changes in coverage and PA requirements. ### What's Missing/Uncertain: - **Effective Dates**: Many clinical policies do not specify effective dates, which can lead to confusion regarding when new policies take effect. - **CPT/HCPCS Codes**: Most clinical policies do not provide specific CPT or HCPCS codes, making it difficult for providers to identify which services require PA. - **WISeR**: Not applicable to Connecticut (WISeR is a Medicare PA model in AZ, NJ, OH, OK, TX, WA only); the placeholder finding is not a signal. - **Foster Care Program Details**: Information about the foster-care MCO program is unspecified, indicating a gap in understanding how this specific population is managed under Medicaid. Overall, Connecticut’s Medicaid program demonstrates a strong commitment to transparency and detailed clinical policies but could benefit from more specific effective dates and CPT/HCPCS codes in its clinical guidelines.